Gleaner_19600401

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the
Spring Play
NAZARETH COLLEGE
LIBRARY Congratulations
to the
New Officers
Vol XXXV-No. 6 NAZARETH COLLEGE, ftOCHESTER. N. Y. Frida y, April I, 1960
Sr. Paulette Invited by President;
Utending Conference in Washington
TOr Prosid<nt or rh< Unu..J Statts
111\'HtS Sas~tr M. P.aulrut-, Or.
I) partkip:ut in •he mttcin~s or thr
Golden Annh•ersary \'V'hilc 1-louse
C..Ucrcn« on Childrm and Youtl•
be brfJ in the City of Wa.shinst<ln
Nintt~n IHMldrC'I.I and MXty.
Signed by the Pr-esidcn L, nnd
ollmpc<l with t he P••e"idcntial
101, this is the invi!nlion that
Lilt<~ Sist~r M. Paulette, Profes·
w of Sociolog)' nnd Chnir·man
J the Sociology Department, to
linshingwn for the Golden Anni·
trs.11')' White Rouse C<>nfcrcncc
Children and Youth meeting
l'WII Marrh 27 to April 2. This
a considernble honor of rccog­lition
since these conferences,
\old every ten ye:us, invite those
1ho •re eminently notsblr in the
.ociologicnl tleld. In at...,nding
uis conference, Sister is the only
DM. so hono1·ed from northern
X•w York State, the fi rst from
Snnreth College and one o! only
lfrttn other nuns. President Eis·
ellooofer has characterized the
lt'ld:able objectives o! the lour
day program calling 7,000 dele·
.rat<s from all over the United
~: "These C<>llfe•·ences ...
rt<Ognize the importance or cbil·
U.n and youth and their lull de·
<tlopmcnt to our nntionnl future
Girls To Participate
In First Sports Night
.\larking the Naza1·eth calendar
lor Friday evening, Apri l 8, is a
1porb night to be preocnted by
~ndenb under the direction o!
lliss Bard~n.
Plaruo call for a Swedish Gym­castle
Routine (f•·ce calisthenics) .
This is " series of blended and
rhythmie exercises aecompanied
i1 musie. It is an Olympic event
!~r women gymnasts. A modern
Iince demonstration based on a
lllde•·n jar.>. lheme also fllls the
program as well as display
aarching drill. A basketball game
~ the Sophs and Frosh will
bo featured. The evening will be
completed by a "top-secret" added
attraction I
... [and thus] the rapidly chung.
ing time in which we live, nnd the
incrensingly fnst pace of ehtmge,
mnke it incumbent upon us to do
everything we cun to plan nheud
nnd to see thnt we prepare to·
day's children well for life in to­morrow's
world."
Two Mock Conventions
Attract Many Students
Ten representatives !rom Naz­areth
College will rcgiste•· a t a
mock political convention at Syra·
cuse University on April 8th and
9th. The convention will consist
o( two meetings, one for each ol
the two mnin polit ical pol'lies.
Delegates ! rom Nazareth, who
are pre-pledged either as Demo­crats
or Republicans, are Carol
Cummings, Marcia Davis, Janet
Doran, J eanne Kick, Teresa Fus­ci
lle. Marlene Llozcnfeld, Mary
Bridget Lyon, Camille Morris,
nosemary Salerno, and Katherine
Scheg.
Call to order Cor t he tenth ses­sion
of t he New York l nt.l>rcol­legiate
Mock Senate in Albany
will be April 28. During the SCS·
sion, scheduled to run through
May 1, t he collegiate representa·
tlves will a ccept 01· reject t he bills
J)r•oposed for laws by the twent y·
odd member colleges. T he purpose
of this organi:r.ation is to acquaint
eollegians with 6.~t.hand knowl­edge
of our Amcr·ican polit ica l
system and legislut ive process. As
Nnznreth's re1ll'esentatives to the
in...,rcollegiate enterprise, Ros.,..
mary Mastropietro, Rosemar)·
Donnelly, Mary Agnes Way and
Sue McGinnis, along with the
other mock sennlo1·s, will be gcat·
ed for the proceedings in the ac­tual
state legislature and elect
their own president, party lead­c•
·s ond party whips.
The Mock Sem•te has •·cceived
national coverage in the countl·y,s
leading periodicals and has befll
ci"'d both by President Eisen·
hower, and former Governors
Dewey and H nt·riman.
Annual Glee Club Concert Presented
Resounding through the East·
man Thcnter· for the second suc­cessive
yen•·, the Nazar·cth C<>l.
ottt Glee Club, under the direc·
t<on o! Dr. David FeUer, pre­,.
oted the annual glee club con­cert
on Sunday, March 27. Sister
M. Knthlecn, chairman ol the
llusic Dc1>nrtment, is moderator
d tbt group and Sister Austin is
co-moderato1'.
llnking :r return to her alma
tDater, Cnndidn P illa was the
cuest soloist.. Since her gradua­ton
from Nazareth in 1958,
C>ndy has spent a ye.~r of study
n scholnrship at La Rinascita in
Italy. Recently she has been mak­ing
a concert lout· of the countl·y
with her own professional uccom~
panist.
Also on the po·ogram were the
madrigals, who made their debut
two years ngo; "The Berna·
dcttes," a smnll choral g1·oup, and
ns guest pcrlormer·s, the St. John
Fisher Glee Club under the direc­tion
of Marie Keber Burbank,
with Helen Kondo!! as uccom·
pnnist.
Mary Wal.h 'GO, assisted by
several seniors, e:hairmanne<l the
t icket sales.
Juniors To Receive
Long·Awaited Rings
Nazareth College Chapel will
be the ocene of the Junior ring
ceremony to be held on Sun­day,
April tenth at three o'clock.
After the traditional blessi ng of
the rings by Father Shannon,
Sister Rose Angela will place
each Junior's ring on her finger.
Co-chair·men of the ceremony
al"C Jeanne Brodcu1' and Nancy
Koch. Barbara l'isciteUo is the
chairman of the tea whieh wJI
be held in Medaille Hall follow.
ing the presentstion or the rings.
Other· Juniors maki ng the a •··
r angements a 1·e: Jane Donne,
programs; Ann Glogowski, mu­sic;
Sheila Keliy, Rowers; Carol
Ronnenberg, invitstions; Judy
Finn and Kathleen Sheehan will
usher.
The ring symbolizes the com·
pletion of a college career and
only those Junio~ who have
maintained a quality point index
of 1.0 ovo•· a two-and-a-half year
period a rc eligible.
Parents and l•·iends are cor·
dially invi...,d.
JUNIORS VICTORS
IN SKIT CONTEST
As chairman of this year's tra­ditional
St.. Patrick's Day fell·
tivilies at Naznrcth, Ann Duys·
son unnounccd the t·esults of the
claJ<s skit com1•clilion at t he close
of the afternoon program on
March 17. Although 110pular opin·
ion seemed to be that this St .
Patl'ick's Day hud occasioned
some of t he bc~t sl<il.s p•·oduccd
at Nnzareth, the judges g•·nnted
winning honors to the Junior
class for their skit, "A Melo­dramatic
Irish Mclodrnma" \VI'it·
ten nnd d irect.cd hy l'nt Ripple
and Mar·ie Checha l<.
Completing the entertainment
for the af"'ruoon, to the delight
of the audience which included
Bishop Kearney, wcr·c four young
Hibe•·ninn danccr·a under t ho di·
reetion of Mrs. Desmond l'enro~e.
Basketball competition between
St. John Fisher intermural teams
followed by a m ixc•· marked the
evening celebration o! St. l>at.
rick's Day at Naz:u'\llh College.
Mercyhurst College
Host to NFCCS
Tho Lake El'ie Region of the
National Federation of Catholic
College Students of Mercyhurat
College in E.Je. Pennsylvania,
held n Discussion Dny on Sundny,
Ma1'\lh lS.
l'at Rookey, Monica McAlpine
and Elaine Hondorf, representing
Nnareth College, conducted a
meeting on the topic "Africa As
We Know lt." To emphasize the
importance of Alrica today, they
surveyed conditions in special
sections of A!l'icn which they
have investigated. The Union of
Play Opens Tomorrow;
"Princess Beauty" Listed
Sir Pufllegau• or:erruled.
Pr;ucestt Beauty, a comic ads.p­lat.
ion of G •· i m m 'li Slcc1>ittg
Beautv, will be p1·esen"'d in the
College Auditorium on April 2
and 3. The play, written by David
Barnett, Jr., will have two mati·
nee pcr(o•·n>ances at 2:30p.m. on
Saturday and Sunday and one
evening performance, Saturday
at 8:30 p.m. Production is under
the di•·ection of Miss Mary Ann
Steckbeck. Tickets will be sold
only at the door nt the price of
$.50.
The plot follows the vein of
Crimm's stoo·y with many humor­ous
elements interject~d. One of
t hese olements, Sir l'ull'lega te,
(Dick Mancini) a 6ighty courtier
of the King (lao Sharlit) opens
the play with a reading of. the
guest list at the christening party
o! l'r•i ncess Beauty (Cnil Place) .
The uninvited Bad l•'uh·y (Pal
Ripple) who is more of a prank·
ster than an evil charaeter, steal­thily
enters upon the happy scene
much to the chag •·in or t he nurse
()larie Mahoney) and oil attend·
ing for she brings as her gilt to
the Princess an evil eurse. Ac·
cording to the curse, on the day
of her sixteenth birthday, the
P tineess will ptick her finger on
a spindle nnd die. Tho Good Fa iry
(Elaine Klingler) as her gift re·
vokes the curse of death and re-
South Afr·ica wns presented by
Pat Rookey, Ghana by Elaine
Hondorf and Algeria by Monica
l !cAipine.
A tentotive plan concerning the
f ut ure study of A!ricn was dmwn
up which may be suitable for
campus or regional programs.
Various other groups discussed
such topics as Mariology, family
life, Socrates and his triology.
Special attention was given to
the topic "How Russinn Are the
Republics of the Union of Soviet
Socialist RepubUes ?"
places it with a hundo·cd. year
sleep. Although the King tr ies to
•·emove the dunger of the curse
being fulfilled by proclaiming
that all the spindles in the land
must be destroyed, The Royal
Weave•· (Kathy Sca nlon) •·ctnins
hers and thus lbe tale o! the
Sleeping Beauty follows its nat.
ural course. The awakening kiss
is planted by Prince Chorming
(Don Morgan) and this tale of
fuides has ib propct· ending.
Fellowship Awarded
Nazareth Alumna
Nazareth College alumna Kath­ryn
Curran was awarded a John
Hay Whitn~y Fellowship in con­nection
with the Ford Foundation.
The grant lli'Ov ides fo( a ye;u"s
study in the humanities nt. one
of six schools: Columbia, llar­vard,
Yale, University o! Cali­fo(
nia, University or Chicago,
a nd Northwestern Unlver6ity.
The appointment to lhis, the t·c.
cepient's trnnsportstion tees nnd
a year's "'aching salary arc in·
eluded in the fellowship. Such
grants are nwa•·ded to worthy
teache rs in or-de•· thnt they may
devote a whole year to •·esearch
in some pnrticular field. This
study, however, )•ields no credit
towm·d a degree.
Mis• Curran, who lives ut 433
Rockel St•·eet In n ochester, has
been teaching English ot East
lligh for ~even years. ln her
senior year ot Nazareth College,
she was President of the Under­graduate
Association. She re·
ceived her master's degr·ee from
~liddlebury College, Vermont and
has done further work at Cornell
and the University of Rochester.
Miss Cunan, the only woman
Ct·om this nrca t.o receive such a
fellowship, 1>lans to devote her
year to a study of comparative
u ....... ture.
2
Church, State Don't Conflict
In view of the !act that 11 Catholic may be nominated for President
of the United States this year, many Protestants and even some
Cntholics ate questioning t he Cntholie stand on Church .u>d state
relationships. Perhnt>s these ideas wiU tlrovidc n new insight.
First, there is no room for discord or contradiction. The Church and
state cover sepurntc and distinct zones of thought and action. The
church busies itsel! with the spiritual and the at.atc with the temporal.
The partition of jurisdiction into the spirit11al and temporal is no less
n principle of Catholicism than of Amereanism. There is no Catholic
political party in America, nor shouJd there be. Christ himsel! says,
"Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to Cod the things
that are God's." Tho position of the Catholic church on this question
is !Ut·tlter defined by t>opo Leo Xlll in the wot·ds: "God bas divided
tho government of tho human race between two J)rinc.ipalities, the
ecclesiastical and the civil; the one being set ove1· the divine, the other
over bun1aJ1 things. Euch i~ supreme in its own sphere; each has fixed
limits within which it. hves and works in hs own native right." 1'bere·
!ore we see that things civil and political are subject as reason and
equity demand to tho ch•il uuthority. U a Catholic occupies the White
llouse it would merely mean that the Pr.,>ident of the United States
was Catholic :u>d not l'rotcstant or Jewish. The tact o! his being u
Catholic will il> no wuy influence his civil and polilicul duties as s uch.
Can You Do Better?
W!Ult is h&Jlpcning to the Jlenetential SJ>h·it of Lent? 11 we face
reality honestly, we must admit a certain resistance to the spit_-it, and
1n many eases, also to the letter o! the Jaw of penance. How shall we,
M thinking Catholics, cope with this att1tude in ourselves 1
We know that observing L<!nt is not a part of the decalogue. But we
also know that Christ Flimscl! said: "Except you do JlCnance, you shall
all likewise pertsh." This is a pretty strong statement. The question
that comes immedint.el)t Lo OUL' minds is, " \Vhy did Christ. command it?"
The primary pu t·posc o! t>enuncc as the Church in t~rprcts it !or us
is ~o bring our souls into closet· union with God by denying ourselves
the things which im11edc our prog1·ess in this union. So01~ o! the
obblaclcs are7 for inbtancc, pleasua·cs of sense (even legitimate ones),
pride, laziness, and so on. Indeed, penance i~ closely connected with
sin. Penance is the utonemcnl for sin.
But penance is al¥o nn act o! love, an apology to the One we love
for having offended llim. The g~ter the Jove one has !or a pen;on,
the greater effort he is willing to make in performing sacrifices Ior
the loved one. Applying this to acts of penance tor our sins, the
g 1·cat.cr our love for C...:od, the gl'eatcr our so•·•·ow to•· sin, the gl'eatc1·
will be the penance we. ru·o will ing to perfo•·m. Pcnuuccs which involve
legitimate pleasures n1·c pat·t.icula t'ly distasteful t.o UIS. Yet we must
sometimes deny ourselves these pleasures too. Not thut they are evil
in themselves, !or they are noL But the Christian mu!t be strong
enough to renounce even good things, in order to return them to God
Who made them. lloreover, good things can become gods to weak
humAn beings. Thcre!o1·e, the Christian di..,iplinea hi> indinalions,
making himsel! the master o! those things which he ma)• lawfully have.
'fhe word "l..ent" derives !rom nn Old English word meaning
""Spt·ing." Spring not only welcomes us to n new lite oi joy and hope
in Nature, but it nlso reminds us of the hope and joy in the new
l)ivine life which Redemption has given us, the "true, eternal spring­lime,
Lhc new CI'Cation und dclivet·anee thnL will be fot·evcr new."
THE GLEANEU
STUDENT I'UJlLIC.\TTON OF
NAZARETH COLLEGE, ROCFTESTER, N. r.
Friday, April 1, 1960
~;ditor-in-Chie! ...•............ . ... . .. .... . ........ Camille Morri•
Associate Edito1·s .. ..... • . ....... Diane ChrisUnn, Ro•emary SalcrtlO
News Editor .................................... Dot•othy 'l'rybulski
Agsistant News Editor .........•......•............ . Anne Duyssen
Feature Edit.or .................. • ..•.•• • •.......... Dorothy Gullet\
Auistan~ Feature Editor ... . .... ... .•.•......... . ...... Pat O'Hara
Exchange Editor ............................... Rosemary Courtney
Reporters ... Rosemary Chl"istiano, Catherine Cormlc)•, U>rett.a Scinta,
Virginia Burgholzc1·. Patricia Trionfcrn, Sully O"foole, Dorine
Honan, 1<3y Bonctl, Gl'ucc Col'cot·an, Ann Gi lbert, Eileen McGee,
Rut.h Rowan, J oanne Wolfe, Barbara Krnus, Pulricia Powderly,
Anne Glogowski, Kathy Sheehan, Christine Wickert, J ean Brodeur,
Eleanor Kawka, l>at.ricia Brogan, Diane Sciscioli, Sheila Kelly,
Mnry Kay )laeNanuu"a, Marilyn Cahier, Mary Ann L3nahnn,
Laurel :Uiller, Patricia Oenni•ton, Judy Todd, Jody Ryan, Eliza·
beth Tyne, Kathy O"Brien, llary Dolan, Joanne Seat·lotla, Trudy
Thurston
Business Manager .......................... . . . . . .. Patricia Walsh
Pt·oo!readers ......... • ........ Susan McGinnis, Ma1·y Kay Killaekey
Illustrator ........................ . ............... Dolores Cicconi
Typists ......... • ...... • ...... • . .... . ~!a rein Davis. Francine Hart
Advisor ...................................• Sister Thomas Marion
THE GLEANER
CHAPLAIN'S CORNER
by
!>ather
Shannon
Paalm 42, which begins the
Muss, w:os composed by someone
who \VIIS ouviously upset. He tells
us ns much in the second verso:
.,Qu:.u·c tristis inccdo, ("\Vhy um I
going about with a long face?")?
The same fact is in the fifth
verse: ••Qual'e trilsis es, anima
mea, ct qua1-e conturbas me!'' He
&P<'aks to himsel!, as a man some­tin,
ea c.loes in moments o! sorrow:
��·Why are you sorro•v!ul, my soul,
why do you UJ)Set me so?"
'l'hcrc urc limes in our lives
when thl• Jlsalm seems to be just
t'ight. tol' us, times when we Hl'C
inclined Lo say to the psnlmist:
•·Those nru my sentin1ent.s, too.
My -oul i~ upset.. I am going
abuul .orrowfuJ and with n long
fnc:e.''
The p.ahnist is not rontent
merely to <>.<press the fact that
sorrow does sometimes enter our
lives, he ttlso has some heltlful
suggestions about what we should
do when it comes. His Rrst sug­gestion
is the 40Emit.te luccm
l.unm ct. vea·it.atem t.uam.'' \Ve
should ask !or Cod's ligltt to sec
our problem in perspective; we
should ask !or God's truth that
we may apply it. to our problem.
It is nn oversimplification to say
that hnving 11 Catholic philosophy
o! li!e will solve a ll our pt·oblcms;
but. it is not too much to say that
having a Catholic philosophy of
li!e will give us the princi)lics we
need to solve those problems.
'fhe !teal Test
Prnc:ticaJ wisdom means being
able to apply the right principles
to the situation we are facing at
the moment. lt is n great tr.1gedy
to keep locked up in our mind&
the tt·uths that would solve the
JH'oblcnus gnawing at ou1· hctu·ts,
1f on ly we had the cou1·nge to up.
t>ly them. 'rbe , ..., , test. o! the
profit you arc getting !rom your
education is this: are you lenm·
ing to apt>!)' in the order or your
•laily life the principles o! the
spcculutive order that you nt·c
learning in the classroom?
The second suggestion of tho
psalmist is : ·'Confitebor t.ibi in
cithUJ"a." lie s uggests thnt we
confess Lo God; in fact ho s ug·
gests that we confess t.o Cod on
the tillwra- wbich is a kind of
harp, not, oi course, the very
large one you might see with a
symphony orchestra, but n omall·
er, more manageable one. Follow­ing
the psalmist's advice quite
literally would c1-eate a t·uthe1·
nmusing J>ict.urc-. Jmaginc CVC1'f
s tudent with a pt·oblem marching
off t.o chopcl with a hart> under
her arm. Picture a thapel full or
students, with problems, plurking
away with all their might at their
harps. Actually the psalmist liked
to talk to God with his hnrp,
somewhat, I suppose, as a teacher
might like to leach with n piece
or tha i!< in his hand.
1'hc illlJIOrulnt th ing, o! course,
is not the han•. but that the
J>Rnlmist was confessing to God.
Whnt would he have us confcu?
Friday, April I, 1960
In the W0111S of llem·y Van Dyke ·'the first day or spring is ...
thing and the first ftl)ring day is anothe1·. The dHTc1·ence between thlll
is sometimes as gre:tt ns u month."
Sometimes indeed! Righ~ now, most of us !eel that sp1·ing will nev•
come. Ah snow I How we love that irresistible force which automab•
ally cancels those weekend plans, makes uhim" a half an hour late a:.
Saturday night and makes us wish we were born in Hawaii.
Shelley expresses our sentiments quite appropriately.
uo wind. if winter tomes, ean spring be .far behind!"
There is no "IF" about it. Winter did come; so have faith a11d I
to the south !or sort. warm breezes, scented with the sweet lttt'Y o6 •
of spring.
"For iron winlea· held he1· fi.-m;
acJ·oss her· sky ho laid his hand;
And bird he slnrvcd, he stiffened worm;
A sightless heaven. u shaven land­Now
the North wind ceases,
The warm south· west awakes
The heavens ure out in fleeces
And carth"s green b.utner shakes."
George Mtredith
Earth's·g•·ecn banner is just. nround the eo1·ncr, wniting for lhe ri~
day. Get up with n s mile on your face tomorrow, open the blinds.,.
behold!!! TEIE DAWN Of" SPRING!
Letter To The Editor
To the Editor or t.hc Gleaner:
It has been brought to the
attention of the )!ission Board
that there has been a sharp de­cline
in the weekly mission col·
lections in the dormitories. The
average is now less than $.18 per
student, which menno that many
students give nothing ut nil.
We wonder if thc1·e has been
some misundentanding about the
mission collection. It takes the
place o! our Sunday eolleetion
and therefore we have an obliga­tion
to contribute to it. We have
no rhoice; it. is a duty and should
he considered ns such.
Last semester we s c n t the
mon•y that we collected th·st, to
enroll the Nnznrcth students in
the Society for the Propagation
of the Faith and secondly to the
Maryknoll Missions in the name
o! Alice Hanlon, one of our for­mer
students. This semester we
also plan to sponsor a special
project which will be decided
upon by the resident •t.udents.
The overall average is poor,
but I would like to give ~pecial
uclmowledgment to the li't•eshmen
nt St. Joseph's who hnvc done
their share in contributing to the
missions and can be looked to as
an example for lhe rest of the
resident student.a.
I! there are any •uggestions on
how we tan increase the dona­tions,
they would be most nppre·
cinted. Just give you 1· suggestion
to any member of the Miss ion
Bon rd.
We hope that the resident stu­dents
will realize theh· obligation
to the missions 11nd that the
weekly mission eollcetion returns
will increase during the remain.
der o! this seme!ttr.
Sincerely yours,
Judy Treeter
Member of the Mission Board
Perhaps not sq much our s ins,
but our responsibility, our pel"·
sonal involvement in OUI' prob·
lem. Perhaps we ought to confess
that we have bod a share in ercat.­ing
our problem: which is a n1uch
healthier attitude o! mind, to ad·
mit that we may well be in the
wrong rather thon to !eel that
we nre a.lways right. and every
one else always nt fnult.
I r we h:we asked !o1· God's
light and truth and made con­l~
ssion, then we m·c rMdy for
l, EGENIJ
She s miled ns •he notieed h•
friends pecking in!
The children had come to ..U:
again!
They pleaded to hear of the ...,.,
and t.he hare,
Then asked many questions abo..
hot· g1·own son.
While dusk sct.tlcd softly in plaa
of th~ sun
She stm·ted them homeward, 1
sleep-nodding pair.
The children decided the WJ
next day
When no one was wale bing 1
wander that way . . .
The garden wos empty; tllfJ
knocked nt her door.
Theil· nnswcr wns s ilence . . . nil
sta t-ted to s plnsh .. .
A shattering thunder! . .. alight·
ning flnsh!
They turned to run home, b.
heard an uproar.
Of men's mocking laugh~r u
insolent shouts,
It captured the children, no n1
to get out ...
And right in the center, with p&lo
in her face
Stood their wondc1·ful lady! Te:u1
filled the! r eye•.
They struggled to help. No or
noticed their cries.
Frightened and trembling thrr
fled from the place.
They run to their mother, to eo:z
fort th~ir tcal'l!
She held her two babes, ber btan
filled with tears, ...
Days JHtsscd in darkness, lht1
Sundny, the sun!
The child1·en, quite silent, walkfl
oul in the nil·.
Their dear Indy met them, slo
answered their prayer,
"Rejoice my dear rhildren, I<'
Jesus hns won!"
-Pat Dennist<P
the third suggcsUon o! the psulm.
ist: ugl)el·n in Oco" (41Hope in tht
U>1-d"). No problem that we f><t
and t.hot we 11eed to solve is w
great tor the grace o! God. nil
is something that we leam IIIII
slowly. Even St. Paul had tow
given a speeiul lesson in t his kiol
of ronfidcncc in God. One day 111
asked Cod 1.0 remove some ditli
culty he '""" facing and God t
hinl: "Ynu must trust. in Me. M
grace is sufficient. for you."
It is for us, too.
Friday, April I, 1960
Pulse Beat
by
r•at
Trionfera
How do you write a th•·cc hun·
dred word expose of inner emo­tion
with clarity and with yet an
objective view?
Collegiate Beat
It all started this morning.
got up. r got out of my coat into
my pajamas, closed the door and
went into the hall. It was seven
o'clock and the noon bell rang.
Suddenly 1 was confronted with a
dilemma; the water f ountain
didn't work. Immediately l an­swered
the phone to see if the
mailman had received the letter I
had sent him today. He told me
he received it yesterday. On the
way to the bathroom, I stepped
on a turtle who had just traded
his shell for a glass house.
His name was Mertle. I finally
reached the door of the bathroom
and sta1·ted to 11ut my dime into
the coke machine. 1 was thirsty.
We don't have milk on our noo•·.
AJtcJ• r hud l>l'u ~hed my hair, l
~·aved my Leeth which was sen­sible
since the water pipes were
rusty. I then made a momentous
dttision; r was going. J Kol there
promptly at three although I
atarled ut !our.
Classes let out early that day,
1ince night was near and the
rond• wc•·e broken up because of
the potato famine. Being of sen·
sible nature my friends and 1
naturally went to the nen1·est pay
phone. The mnllman had at last
received the telegram. With n
jovial heart I rejoined my friends.
She decided to go to b rcukfast
since it was near midnight and
would soon be dark. It was the
middle of summe1·, so we had to
qain put on our boots, since the
leaves were falling.
It wasn't until t he next mom·
ing that an emergency call was
made. The chimney had u leak, so
the mailman only charged us
forty dollars !or painting the
basement, which wasn't bad eon­sldel'ing
that we couldn't use the
outdoor pool anyway. The ite
skates soon were melted by the
h~at of tho ice box. It wnsn't un·
til later that I decided that this
cby wasn't particularly interest-­ing
so I gave up und got out o!
bed, which was unfortunate since
the ceiling had pink polka dots on
it. I had to go to school so T slept
until the next dny.
Suddenly the realization, the
awful truth, t he dny wus newly
awakening. The sky was blue and
birds sang their little hearts ou t.
Thank goodness, it was at last
April 2nd.
TRANT'S Inc.
Catholic Supply Store
Religious Articles for
Church and Home
98 Clinton N. 115 Franklin St.
1_.:::,:~: .~6: __
Spring Comes To Erin,
Deirdre Writes Home
S]ll'ing is here! Fot· U.C.D. stu·
dents, this means increased study
before exams, but !or many or the
thirty or forty Amel'icans, it also
menns that our yeur in frcland is
drawing to a close. Students !rom
Fairfield College (Connecticut),
The College o! St. Eliuabeth
(New Jer~y), St. John's Uni·
versity ( Minnesoto), and sev­eul
othea- institutions are here on
a "junior .. ye."lr-abroad" basis, al­though
there arc also many
Americans doing full degrees
here. Mainly, those here tor their
junior year nre English and his­tol
·y majol's, and nMrly all take
some l>hilosophy clMs-<>!ten we
are the only laymen in a sea of
clel'ical philosophers.
Natural lleauty of Ireland
What docs Ireland look like
through our Amel'icnn eyes? Phy­sically,
it is a beautiful country,
edged with mounl11ins, but level
o•· slightly I'Olling in the center,
somewhat like the shape of a
saucer. The hues in the scenery
are indescribably lovely; the deep
green is probably due to the al·
most daily rainfall. Pretty streams
l'ipple through g reen fields every.
where (there are 800 lakes and
r ivers in this small island), and
many of the roads wind us if
tuken straight from the scrolls in
the Book of Kells. A !though man)•
count1·y places probably haven't
changed much in 200 years, the
1relnnd we know is not, on the
whole, t he Ireland of Paddy's pig
and the shi llelagh; this •·ising
country is in many ways just as
modern ns nny othe1·.
HOSililality Plus
Ireland is small enough to have
a fnmi ly quality with all the con·
nected bickering and !rendliness.
Among their own, Irishmen tend
to be class-conscious and n bit
snobbish, yet they are a very hos­pitable
race, and we have found
them very friendly to us. As a
couple of us cycled through the
country, we are cordi:•lly greeted
on the road by perfect strnngers.
Part of their endearing charms
is an ability to take a real and
personal interest in people, and
part is due to their complacent
philosophy of life. An Irishman
takes life as it comes-he always
has t ime fo1· others, doesn't seem
to worry, and is never in a hurry
about anything. Although quiet
rind soft·SJlOken, t here is an e le·
ment of youth and joy about the
Irish, and they are rightly known
for their shnrp wit.
Homeward Thoughts
As our thoughts tum home­wa1'
d, we mny ask ourselves whnt
PRESCRIPTION
SPECIALISTS
The
Central
Pharmacy
9 SOUTH MAIN ST.
PITISFORD, N. Y.
Phone
LUdlow 6-3634
THE GLEANER 3
April's Jest: "What fools these mortals be!"
Well, bow do you like being
sent to the third flou•· !or abl!<l·
lutely no reason at nil? Or what
could be more vexing than to lilt
n cup of saline coffee to your lips
at 8:16 ~~~the morning? Suga1· on
your tunn6sh ll3ndwich, anyone?
These pranks are part of the age·
old custom of April [o'ool's Ony.
Now we say why is such a beau­tiful
month given such u day! No
one really l<nows. Perhaps some
cynic hated spring or perhaps ..
anyway, there's no nvoiding it.
The day has become n purt of our
great American tradition, equated
with the glorious Fourth. Doubt·
less, Mr. W. and Tom wouldn't
appreciate it. The day had its
advantages, tho'. Laughingly a
student may hand in uncompleted
homework. Ap1·il Fool! Or a failed
test could be bhuned on the care­free
exubera~c o! the day. So
what should one blnm11 a failed
course on? An unfavorable phase
of the moon?
All you rcru·cssed practical jok­ers,
nota bene. Here's your chance
to cut loose. I am obliged not to
divulgll any choice pranks, but if
you'd "~1re to step up after the
show . . !' NO\\"' on the national
scene, t his day cou ld be monu­mental.
The headline~ may rend:
"Segregation l!sue Dissolved in
Favor oi Hn•·monious Integra­tion,''
"Kiu·uschchev D i s p Ia y s
Genuine Smile Cor Ike," "Russia
Gives Up Rnco to Moon." Of
course Ute reply would be-wuit'll
Hearst gets hold of those. Unfor­tunately,
it is just that Day
again. Nothing so em·thshaking is
predicted to occur, disillusioned
reader, so return to your stale of
hopefulness and carefree -oblivon
but beware, take every statement
you hear ucum grano snlisP' Sny,
did you hear we're gctti ng t hree
weeks ofT at Easter! Happy April
First!
this year bas meant for us. For
myself, at least, it has meant
more intense wo•·k, nnd 1 think
for all of us it bas meant more
thought. Our yea•· here has
opened u whole wol'id we neve•·
thought of, nnd we may now
think about solving or unde•··
Ml.anding problems we never knew
existed. Although we can't clnim
to really know the Irish in this
sho1't lime, we have come a long
way in understanding and t·c­$
pecting another culture. This
year has deepened and broadened
our knowledge in a wuy not pos­sible
from books alone, and it has
been an invaluable one which none
of us will ever fot·get.
Nothing is mo1·e irritating than
not being invited to a party you
wouldn't be caught dcnd at.
ak HAmilton 6-8587
ANTHONY-KLEE
CORPORATION
Commercial P..inling
165 ST. PAUl ST.
ROCHESTER 4, N. Y.
by Karen Keating
To those with n nose for news
and especinlly new fashions, il
you really want to be in that in­ne•
· circle of fashionable women
this year, no sleeves please ...
sleeves are out but definitely.
Waistlines will migrnte either
up or down from the normal po­sition,
and necklines are un·
adomed. Pleats are back, espe­cially
in evening gowns and
dresses. Some designc•·s have
For the Best In
turned out dt·csscs with jackets
and have called then• suits, while
othc•·a a•·e sticking to the conven­tionnl
skh·t and jllcket type.
Lounging-pants for formal wear
is the big controversy fashion­wise
this ycnr. The house or Dior
is the leading promoter along this
line and the costumes range from
elaborately bejeweled silks to
splashy da.ron • eot.ton combina­tion
prints.
--·-----i
ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
For School or Home
I TAPE RECORDERS
HI-FI MUSIC
STEREO SOUND
INTER-COM SYSTEMS
TELEPHONE EQUIPMENT
SHORTWAVE
Come To
Rochester Radio Supply Co., Inc.
600 EAST MAIN STREET
(Corner of University)
ROCHESTER 5, N. Y.
4
Collector's Corner
by
Sally
O"l'oole
First or nil, congratulations to
Anne )'raneo and "All that Jazz."
SpMking of thnt topie, there is
a new trend n!oot o! bringing
back more live jnzr.. To the jn.z·
men, the1·e is nothing like a live
nudicnce to bring out the best in
thei1· plnying. The idenl record
dnte, as faa· ns most of them ~u·c
concerned, is on a "nwnot.c" toea·
lion, that is tnped dul'ing an ac­tual
pcrfom•unce before 11 live
audience. These a·ccoJ•dings Cl\l)~
tuo-e nccun•tcly the feeling of
spontaneously impl'oviscd j t' z z.
However, these uremot.es" have
their hazards. Rcco1·ding studios
mnintain clnbomtc equipment to
bring out the best in ndclity. 'l'hc
acoustics in most places whe1•e
jnzz is played a•oe usunlly not
very suitable for 1-ecording pur­poses.
Also, human f1·nilty enters
into the picture; even the best
jazzmen can nnd do make mis­takes.
There obviou•ly cnn be no
additional "takes" onee the band
has pla)•ed the tune, so the qunl·
ity may suffer. BuL if rou're a
brnve adventurous soul. who is
willing to risk the chance of some
minor imperfections !or the sake
of true Sl)()nt.nneous jnzz, tr)'
"Ellington st. Newport-,'' or May.
nard Ferguson's ''A Me8sage
Co·om Birdlnnd," Co1· n starter.
Hopscotching: Johnny Mnthis
has a new nlbum, ''Fuithfully." I
haven'L heard it, but it's oupposcd
to be smooth and ensy li~tening.
Connie ~·l'lmeis has slOPJ>ed try.
ing to outs hout the bnnd nnd hns
Rtartcd to sing. Her nlbum "Con­nie
.f.'J"ancis Sings 1tfllinn Fuvo1··
ites" is an extun1llc. A ftcr u two
yea(' Rtretch in the i\l·my, Elvis
is back! During hi• visiL with
Uncle Sum, tho 25-yell!"·old rock·
and-roll idol en1·ncd, in addition
to his $145.2d n month sergeant's
s.nlary, n "mere" $l.3 tnill ion in
1·eeo•·d •·oyalties. Something new
Compliments of
DUPLICATING
PRODUCTS CO.
460 Clinton Ave. So.
Rochester 20, N. Y.
A. B. Dick Products
HAmilton 6-3740
Bastian Division
JOSTEN COMPANY
Official
Jewelers and Engravers
ROBERT E. KILLIP
I OS Laney Road
Rochester 20, N. Y.
H lllside 5-1706
Pi Gamma Mu Honor Society
Installs Eleven Nazarenes
The Nazareth College and St.
John Fisher College chapters of
the National Social Science Honor
Society, Pi Gamma Mu, inducted
new members on Monday, Febru­ary
29, in the Medaillc Hall S...
tial Room.
After the installation cere­monica
prosided over by :Miss
Mary T. Bush, Nazareth College
Chapter President, and Thomas
McDermott, St. John Fisher
Chapter President, the Rev. Rob­ert
l\1. Miller, C.S.B., a member
of the St. John Fisher faculty,
spoke on "Philosophy and the So­cial
Sciences."
The students who were inducted
hnd attained the eligibility re­quirements
of at least 20 hours in
the Social Scientes with an aver­ngc
grudc of 8 nnd a rank in the
UPJICr t hird of his or her class.
The Nn~nreth students inducted
WCI'C: Siste•· Anita, Barbara PJ'O·
!etta, Belen Cupolo, Eliza beth
Davidson, Mary Bl'idget Lyon,
EJ(.I_nflOJ" Kawka, Mary Kay Mae·
Nama•·a, Susan McGinnis, Rose.
mnry Salerno, Nancy Furino and
Catherine Foley.
The new members of the St.
John Fisher c h a p t e r include:
Franklin L. Kemp, Joseph Polizzi,
James Bond, David Glossner, Jer·
ome Brady Callan, Edwin Socf·
fing, Frank Argento and Patrick
Lavelle.
After the mee~ing a social hour
was held to foster the social re­IKtions
between the two chapters.
In conjunction with this, another
joint meeting will be held this
month.
in the "sing·along, craz.e--Nelson
Riddle, who has done orchestral
aro11ngcments ! or such greats as
Judy Garland, Nat "King" Cole,
Frank Si11<1tra und a host of
other·• has an album out called
"Sing a Song with Riddle." There
is no recorded cho1·us to sing
along with you; the album comes
complete with song sheets with
boLh wo•·da and music. The spot·
light is yours ! Just take it easy
tmd listen or dance to lhe music
itself. Jt'$ really unusual.
OPEN EVENINGS
A. Dl PASQUALE
SHOE CO.
QUALITY SHOES
For the Entire Family
Sold Direct from Factory
To Yov
lU N. UNION STREET
ROCHESTER., N. Y.
I
THE GLEANER
Junioli. ~~
C,.foif ~~ WOII.k
Again this year in accord with
their program of s tudies, the
junior speech therapists have be·
gun their teaching experiences in
the Speech Clinic at Nazareth.
The six juniors, Sally Bragg,
Linda Casey, Jane Donne, Ken
Ralaby, Nancy Koch, and Kathy
Sheehan arc very enthusiastic
about their .,first cases." The
children under their care con1e
this year fron• two o! Rochester's
grammar schools. The clinic pro·
gram is the eore of the junior's
second scmest.or work and con.
sists of four class lectures eAch
week and three individual therapy
sessions of one-half hour caeh by
each student. Sister Helen Daniel
and :1-lrs. Naomi Chamberlain of
the Speech Department conduct
the class lectures, with M1·s.
Chrunbel'lnin •upcrvising tho ther·
apy wo1·k and giving th ree half.
hour group thernpy lessons to t he
children. '!'his is the fi1·st !ormol
opportunity for the sl)cech cor·
rection majors to put into prac­tice
the theories and methods
they a•·c studying.
Seniors Beware--Be Wise
Opening day for the annual
spring series of 1·ecord ex ami na·
tions was March 29. That n•orn·
ing all Sophomores, together with
Seniors in the Art, Nursing, and
Business Departments, ettempted
to select the ~orrect answers to a
series of three Jevent.y-five min·
nute tests, one each in Natural
Science, Social Science, and lhe
Humanities. Meanwhile, the re­mainin~>:
group of Seniors met a
special test series designated as
Advanced Tests.
Senior Comps
The Senio.-s will be especially
concentrating on preparation for
the college examination• sched­uled
!or April 28, when they will
write their Senio1· Comp1·chcn·
sivcs. The title or these tests
spenks for itself!
Warren Grinnan's
Gourmet Shop
1525 Lake Avenue
Glen. 3-0570
Fancy Md Imported Foods
T ro>ppist Monks Products
Come in and Brow:e
JUSTTAKE ME TO II WHERE OLD
FRIENDS MEET
PlillFORD INN I
Pittsford, New York
BILL LISI, Prop.
-------------------~
McConnell's
* ICE CREAM
and
LUNCHES
* 60 N. Main Street
Pittsford, N.Y.
LUdlow 6-3634
Friday, April I, 1960
Trouble and Fun in Palace Kingdom
Hear Ye, Hear Ye ...
.,One.sies-twoties! Now we're
on cightsies! Ha-ba, you landed
on threcsica!" What could this
be, going on in our 0\\'n audi·
tor ium! No, you're wrong if you
thought it could be Education
minora learning to teach kinder­garten.
It's really Gail Place and
Dick Mancini playing hopscoteh.
A person can forget how in ten
or niteen years, you know. Gail
and Diek have to learn all over
again for the forthcoming SRO
production "Prmcctl Beauty.'"
We've j ust taker a look "behind
the stcnes, at one or the rehear·
8(111 .
Thing" aren't always quite that
lively though. Imagin e what
miuAt happen to you if you were
rehearsing a long, long sleep at
tho end of u long, long day. It
did htiJ>pen to Inn Shal'lit, who
J>h•ys the King. The King not
only dozed, but even snored! And
l'ighl under the eyes of his direc­tor,
Miss Stcekbcek! Gail, who
told this talc, admits that she
flnds heo·self nodding all too rea­listically
at times too! We hope
thit happens only nt rehearsals!
Like every fairy t.a1e, "P,-i,rcess
Btorctv" has its bod !airy. At
flrst she wasn'L a very good bad
fairy. ller nasty. nasty laugh just
wasn't na.sty enough. Pat Ripple
is trying thougt. Everyone has
greaL eonfldcnce that her "crazy
cackle" will be suffieiently witk
by curtain time.
Cathy Chapman hadn't worbl
out the lighting schemes at til
time of this interview, but P""'
ised that the lighting would ~
appropriately exciting nnd e
chanting. After nll what is 1
fairy talc without wand wa.U.
light and a few moonbea11>
Cathy is at the switehboard 111
ting them ready.
How in the world will that IG<
est dis:1ppenr with the wnve ol1
wand, we wondered? That's pa~
of the magic Cathy wouldn't ,.
veal. T'hat'a something you wil
have to sec for youo.,.elf.
While stiil "behind the sctnl!
we saw a gl'cat chase, with tU
good and the blld fail·y chn���i•l
each other all ovco· the klngdo11.
Before the chase was over, L
the charaetei'S involved had bftl
around the stage th rcc times ani
we were getting very confutf(
In making a hasty exit C1·om "I»
hind the scenes" we wish Ant
Duyssen, A~si$tant. Dh·cctor, gc*
luck. We hope us prop dir«U<
she won't misplace Gail's jum~
rope!
After seeing all the fun ul
activity "behind the scenes" .,
know this will be a delightful p:•
formance of a favorite Cairy w
\Ve know you'll uwand" to !­..
out (ront" at. eurtain time!!
Sociology
Spin a platter ..• have some chatter .• •
and sip that real great taste of Coke.
Sure, you can have a party without
Coca-Cola-but who wants to!
8o1tled under authority of The Coca-Colo Company by
ROCHESTER COCA-COLA BOTILING CORP.
Rochester, N. Y.

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Transcript

Don't Miss
the
Spring Play
NAZARETH COLLEGE
LIBRARY Congratulations
to the
New Officers
Vol XXXV-No. 6 NAZARETH COLLEGE, ftOCHESTER. N. Y. Frida y, April I, 1960
Sr. Paulette Invited by President;
Utending Conference in Washington
TOr Prosidnfcrcncc
Children and Youth meeting
l'WII Marrh 27 to April 2. This
a considernble honor of rccog­lition
since these conferences,
\old every ten ye:us, invite those
1ho •re eminently notsblr in the
.ociologicnl tleld. In at...,nding
uis conference, Sister is the only
DM. so hono1·ed from northern
X•w York State, the fi rst from
Snnreth College and one o! only
lfrttn other nuns. President Eis·
ellooofer has characterized the
lt'ld:able objectives o! the lour
day program calling 7,000 dele·
.ratllfe•·ences ...
rt. lheme also fllls the
program as well as display
aarching drill. A basketball game
~ the Sophs and Frosh will
bo featured. The evening will be
completed by a "top-secret" added
attraction I
... [and thus] the rapidly chung.
ing time in which we live, nnd the
incrensingly fnst pace of ehtmge,
mnke it incumbent upon us to do
everything we cun to plan nheud
nnd to see thnt we prepare to·
day's children well for life in to­morrow's
world."
Two Mock Conventions
Attract Many Students
Ten representatives !rom Naz­areth
College will rcgiste•· a t a
mock political convention at Syra·
cuse University on April 8th and
9th. The convention will consist
o( two meetings, one for each ol
the two mnin polit ical pol'lies.
Delegates ! rom Nazareth, who
are pre-pledged either as Demo­crats
or Republicans, are Carol
Cummings, Marcia Davis, Janet
Doran, J eanne Kick, Teresa Fus­ci
lle. Marlene Llozcnfeld, Mary
Bridget Lyon, Camille Morris,
nosemary Salerno, and Katherine
Scheg.
Call to order Cor t he tenth ses­sion
of t he New York l nt.l>rcol­legiate
Mock Senate in Albany
will be April 28. During the SCS·
sion, scheduled to run through
May 1, t he collegiate representa·
tlves will a ccept 01· reject t he bills
J)r•oposed for laws by the twent y·
odd member colleges. T he purpose
of this organi:r.ation is to acquaint
eollegians with 6.~t.hand knowl­edge
of our Amcr·ican polit ica l
system and legislut ive process. As
Nnznreth's re1ll'esentatives to the
in...,rcollegiate enterprise, Ros.,..
mary Mastropietro, Rosemar)·
Donnelly, Mary Agnes Way and
Sue McGinnis, along with the
other mock sennlo1·s, will be gcat·
ed for the proceedings in the ac­tual
state legislature and elect
their own president, party lead­c•
·s ond party whips.
The Mock Sem•te has •·cceived
national coverage in the countl·y,s
leading periodicals and has befll
ci"'d both by President Eisen·
hower, and former Governors
Dewey and H nt·riman.
Annual Glee Club Concert Presented
Resounding through the East·
man Thcnter· for the second suc­cessive
yen•·, the Nazar·cth C<>l.
ottt Glee Club, under the direc·
tnrtment, is moderator
d tbt group and Sister Austin is
co-moderato1'.
llnking :r return to her alma
tDater, Cnndidn P illa was the
cuest soloist.. Since her gradua­ton
from Nazareth in 1958,
C>ndy has spent a ye.~r of study
n scholnrship at La Rinascita in
Italy. Recently she has been mak­ing
a concert lout· of the countl·y
with her own professional uccom~
panist.
Also on the po·ogram were the
madrigals, who made their debut
two years ngo; "The Berna·
dcttes," a smnll choral g1·oup, and
ns guest pcrlormer·s, the St. John
Fisher Glee Club under the direc­tion
of Marie Keber Burbank,
with Helen Kondo!! as uccom·
pnnist.
Mary Wal.h 'GO, assisted by
several seniors, e:hairmanneat.
rick's Day at Naz:u'\llh College.
Mercyhurst College
Host to NFCCS
Tho Lake El'ie Region of the
National Federation of Catholic
College Students of Mercyhurat
College in E.Je. Pennsylvania,
held n Discussion Dny on Sundny,
Ma1'\lh lS.
l'at Rookey, Monica McAlpine
and Elaine Hondorf, representing
Nnareth College, conducted a
meeting on the topic "Africa As
We Know lt." To emphasize the
importance of Alrica today, they
surveyed conditions in special
sections of A!l'icn which they
have investigated. The Union of
Play Opens Tomorrow;
"Princess Beauty" Listed
Sir Pufllegau• or:erruled.
Pr;ucestt Beauty, a comic ads.p­lat.
ion of G •· i m m 'li Slcc1>ittg
Beautv, will be p1·esen"'d in the
College Auditorium on April 2
and 3. The play, written by David
Barnett, Jr., will have two mati·
nee pcr(o•·n>ances at 2:30p.m. on
Saturday and Sunday and one
evening performance, Saturday
at 8:30 p.m. Production is under
the di•·ection of Miss Mary Ann
Steckbeck. Tickets will be sold
only at the door nt the price of
$.50.
The plot follows the vein of
Crimm's stoo·y with many humor­ous
elements interject~d. One of
t hese olements, Sir l'ull'lega te,
(Dick Mancini) a 6ighty courtier
of the King (lao Sharlit) opens
the play with a reading of. the
guest list at the christening party
o! l'r•i ncess Beauty (Cnil Place) .
The uninvited Bad l•'uh·y (Pal
Ripple) who is more of a prank·
ster than an evil charaeter, steal­thily
enters upon the happy scene
much to the chag •·in or t he nurse
()larie Mahoney) and oil attend·
ing for she brings as her gilt to
the Princess an evil eurse. Ac·
cording to the curse, on the day
of her sixteenth birthday, the
P tineess will ptick her finger on
a spindle nnd die. Tho Good Fa iry
(Elaine Klingler) as her gift re·
vokes the curse of death and re-
South Afr·ica wns presented by
Pat Rookey, Ghana by Elaine
Hondorf and Algeria by Monica
l !cAipine.
A tentotive plan concerning the
f ut ure study of A!ricn was dmwn
up which may be suitable for
campus or regional programs.
Various other groups discussed
such topics as Mariology, family
life, Socrates and his triology.
Special attention was given to
the topic "How Russinn Are the
Republics of the Union of Soviet
Socialist RepubUes ?"
places it with a hundo·cd. year
sleep. Although the King tr ies to
•·emove the dunger of the curse
being fulfilled by proclaiming
that all the spindles in the land
must be destroyed, The Royal
Weave•· (Kathy Sca nlon) •·ctnins
hers and thus lbe tale o! the
Sleeping Beauty follows its nat.
ural course. The awakening kiss
is planted by Prince Chorming
(Don Morgan) and this tale of
fuides has ib propct· ending.
Fellowship Awarded
Nazareth Alumna
Nazareth College alumna Kath­ryn
Curran was awarded a John
Hay Whitn~y Fellowship in con­nection
with the Ford Foundation.
The grant lli'Ov ides fo( a ye;u"s
study in the humanities nt. one
of six schools: Columbia, llar­vard,
Yale, University o! Cali­fo(
nia, University or Chicago,
a nd Northwestern Unlver6ity.
The appointment to lhis, the t·c.
cepient's trnnsportstion tees nnd
a year's "'aching salary arc in·
eluded in the fellowship. Such
grants are nwa•·ded to worthy
teache rs in or-de•· thnt they may
devote a whole year to •·esearch
in some pnrticular field. This
study, however, )•ields no credit
towm·d a degree.
Mis• Curran, who lives ut 433
Rockel St•·eet In n ochester, has
been teaching English ot East
lligh for ~even years. ln her
senior year ot Nazareth College,
she was President of the Under­graduate
Association. She re·
ceived her master's degr·ee from
~liddlebury College, Vermont and
has done further work at Cornell
and the University of Rochester.
Miss Cunan, the only woman
Ct·om this nrca t.o receive such a
fellowship, 1>lans to devote her
year to a study of comparative
u ....... ture.
2
Church, State Don't Conflict
In view of the !act that 11 Catholic may be nominated for President
of the United States this year, many Protestants and even some
Cntholics ate questioning t he Cntholie stand on Church .u>d state
relationships. Perhnt>s these ideas wiU tlrovidc n new insight.
First, there is no room for discord or contradiction. The Church and
state cover sepurntc and distinct zones of thought and action. The
church busies itsel! with the spiritual and the at.atc with the temporal.
The partition of jurisdiction into the spirit11al and temporal is no less
n principle of Catholicism than of Amereanism. There is no Catholic
political party in America, nor shouJd there be. Christ himsel! says,
"Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to Cod the things
that are God's." Tho position of the Catholic church on this question
is !Ut·tlter defined by t>opo Leo Xlll in the wot·ds: "God bas divided
tho government of tho human race between two J)rinc.ipalities, the
ecclesiastical and the civil; the one being set ove1· the divine, the other
over bun1aJ1 things. Euch i~ supreme in its own sphere; each has fixed
limits within which it. hves and works in hs own native right." 1'bere·
!ore we see that things civil and political are subject as reason and
equity demand to tho ch•il uuthority. U a Catholic occupies the White
llouse it would merely mean that the Pr.,>ident of the United States
was Catholic :u>d not l'rotcstant or Jewish. The tact o! his being u
Catholic will il> no wuy influence his civil and polilicul duties as s uch.
Can You Do Better?
W!Ult is h&Jlpcning to the Jlenetential SJ>h·it of Lent? 11 we face
reality honestly, we must admit a certain resistance to the spit_-it, and
1n many eases, also to the letter o! the Jaw of penance. How shall we,
M thinking Catholics, cope with this att1tude in ourselves 1
We know that observing Lenuncc as the Church in t~rprcts it !or us
is ~o bring our souls into closet· union with God by denying ourselves
the things which im11edc our prog1·ess in this union. So01~ o! the
obblaclcs are7 for inbtancc, pleasua·cs of sense (even legitimate ones),
pride, laziness, and so on. Indeed, penance i~ closely connected with
sin. Penance is the utonemcnl for sin.
But penance is al¥o nn act o! love, an apology to the One we love
for having offended llim. The g~ter the Jove one has !or a pen;on,
the greater effort he is willing to make in performing sacrifices Ior
the loved one. Applying this to acts of penance tor our sins, the
g 1·cat.cr our love for C...:od, the gl'eatcr our so•·•·ow to•· sin, the gl'eatc1·
will be the penance we. ru·o will ing to perfo•·m. Pcnuuccs which involve
legitimate pleasures n1·c pat·t.icula t'ly distasteful t.o UIS. Yet we must
sometimes deny ourselves these pleasures too. Not thut they are evil
in themselves, !or they are noL But the Christian mu!t be strong
enough to renounce even good things, in order to return them to God
Who made them. lloreover, good things can become gods to weak
humAn beings. Thcre!o1·e, the Christian di..,iplinea hi> indinalions,
making himsel! the master o! those things which he ma)• lawfully have.
'fhe word "l..ent" derives !rom nn Old English word meaning
""Spt·ing." Spring not only welcomes us to n new lite oi joy and hope
in Nature, but it nlso reminds us of the hope and joy in the new
l)ivine life which Redemption has given us, the "true, eternal spring­lime,
Lhc new CI'Cation und dclivet·anee thnL will be fot·evcr new."
THE GLEANEU
STUDENT I'UJlLIC.\TTON OF
NAZARETH COLLEGE, ROCFTESTER, N. r.
Friday, April 1, 1960
~;ditor-in-Chie! ...•............ . ... . .. .... . ........ Camille Morri•
Associate Edito1·s .. ..... • . ....... Diane ChrisUnn, Ro•emary SalcrtlO
News Editor .................................... Dot•othy 'l'rybulski
Agsistant News Editor .........•......•............ . Anne Duyssen
Feature Edit.or .................. • ..•.•• • •.......... Dorothy Gullet\
Auistan~ Feature Editor ... . .... ... .•.•......... . ...... Pat O'Hara
Exchange Editor ............................... Rosemary Courtney
Reporters ... Rosemary Chl"istiano, Catherine Cormlc)•, U>rett.a Scinta,
Virginia Burgholzc1·. Patricia Trionfcrn, Sully O"foole, Dorine
Honan, 1<3y Bonctl, Gl'ucc Col'cot·an, Ann Gi lbert, Eileen McGee,
Rut.h Rowan, J oanne Wolfe, Barbara Krnus, Pulricia Powderly,
Anne Glogowski, Kathy Sheehan, Christine Wickert, J ean Brodeur,
Eleanor Kawka, l>at.ricia Brogan, Diane Sciscioli, Sheila Kelly,
Mnry Kay )laeNanuu"a, Marilyn Cahier, Mary Ann L3nahnn,
Laurel :Uiller, Patricia Oenni•ton, Judy Todd, Jody Ryan, Eliza·
beth Tyne, Kathy O"Brien, llary Dolan, Joanne Seat·lotla, Trudy
Thurston
Business Manager .......................... . . . . . .. Patricia Walsh
Pt·oo!readers ......... • ........ Susan McGinnis, Ma1·y Kay Killaekey
Illustrator ........................ . ............... Dolores Cicconi
Typists ......... • ...... • ...... • . .... . ~!a rein Davis. Francine Hart
Advisor ...................................• Sister Thomas Marion
THE GLEANER
CHAPLAIN'S CORNER
by
!>ather
Shannon
Paalm 42, which begins the
Muss, w:os composed by someone
who \VIIS ouviously upset. He tells
us ns much in the second verso:
.,Qu:.u·c tristis inccdo, ("\Vhy um I
going about with a long face?")?
The same fact is in the fifth
verse: ••Qual'e trilsis es, anima
mea, ct qua1-e conturbas me!'' He
&P.ly them. 'rbe , ..., , test. o! the
profit you arc getting !rom your
education is this: are you lenm·
ing to apt>!)' in the order or your
•laily life the principles o! the
spcculutive order that you nt·c
learning in the classroom?
The second suggestion of tho
psalmist is : ·'Confitebor t.ibi in
cithUJ"a." lie s uggests thnt we
confess Lo God; in fact ho s ug·
gests that we confess t.o Cod on
the tillwra- wbich is a kind of
harp, not, oi course, the very
large one you might see with a
symphony orchestra, but n omall·
er, more manageable one. Follow­ing
the psalmist's advice quite
literally would c1-eate a t·uthe1·
nmusing J>ict.urc-. Jmaginc CVC1'f
s tudent with a pt·oblem marching
off t.o chopcl with a hart> under
her arm. Picture a thapel full or
students, with problems, plurking
away with all their might at their
harps. Actually the psalmist liked
to talk to God with his hnrp,
somewhat, I suppose, as a teacher
might like to leach with n piece
or tha i!< in his hand.
1'hc illlJIOrulnt th ing, o! course,
is not the han•. but that the
J>Rnlmist was confessing to God.
Whnt would he have us confcu?
Friday, April I, 1960
In the W0111S of llem·y Van Dyke ·'the first day or spring is ...
thing and the first ftl)ring day is anothe1·. The dHTc1·ence between thlll
is sometimes as gre:tt ns u month."
Sometimes indeed! Righ~ now, most of us !eel that sp1·ing will nev•
come. Ah snow I How we love that irresistible force which automab•
ally cancels those weekend plans, makes uhim" a half an hour late a:.
Saturday night and makes us wish we were born in Hawaii.
Shelley expresses our sentiments quite appropriately.
uo wind. if winter tomes, ean spring be .far behind!"
There is no "IF" about it. Winter did come; so have faith a11d I
to the south !or sort. warm breezes, scented with the sweet lttt'Y o6 •
of spring.
"For iron winlea· held he1· fi.-m;
acJ·oss her· sky ho laid his hand;
And bird he slnrvcd, he stiffened worm;
A sightless heaven. u shaven land­Now
the North wind ceases,
The warm south· west awakes
The heavens ure out in fleeces
And carth"s green b.utner shakes."
George Mtredith
Earth's·g•·ecn banner is just. nround the eo1·ncr, wniting for lhe ri~
day. Get up with n s mile on your face tomorrow, open the blinds.,.
behold!!! TEIE DAWN Of" SPRING!
Letter To The Editor
To the Editor or t.hc Gleaner:
It has been brought to the
attention of the )!ission Board
that there has been a sharp de­cline
in the weekly mission col·
lections in the dormitories. The
average is now less than $.18 per
student, which menno that many
students give nothing ut nil.
We wonder if thc1·e has been
some misundentanding about the
mission collection. It takes the
place o! our Sunday eolleetion
and therefore we have an obliga­tion
to contribute to it. We have
no rhoice; it. is a duty and should
he considered ns such.
Last semester we s c n t the
mon•y that we collected th·st, to
enroll the Nnznrcth students in
the Society for the Propagation
of the Faith and secondly to the
Maryknoll Missions in the name
o! Alice Hanlon, one of our for­mer
students. This semester we
also plan to sponsor a special
project which will be decided
upon by the resident •t.udents.
The overall average is poor,
but I would like to give ~pecial
uclmowledgment to the li't•eshmen
nt St. Joseph's who hnvc done
their share in contributing to the
missions and can be looked to as
an example for lhe rest of the
resident student.a.
I! there are any •uggestions on
how we tan increase the dona­tions,
they would be most nppre·
cinted. Just give you 1· suggestion
to any member of the Miss ion
Bon rd.
We hope that the resident stu­dents
will realize theh· obligation
to the missions 11nd that the
weekly mission eollcetion returns
will increase during the remain.
der o! this seme!ttr.
Sincerely yours,
Judy Treeter
Member of the Mission Board
Perhaps not sq much our s ins,
but our responsibility, our pel"·
sonal involvement in OUI' prob·
lem. Perhaps we ought to confess
that we have bod a share in ercat.­ing
our problem: which is a n1uch
healthier attitude o! mind, to ad·
mit that we may well be in the
wrong rather thon to !eel that
we nre a.lways right. and every
one else always nt fnult.
I r we h:we asked !o1· God's
light and truth and made con­l~
ssion, then we m·c rMdy for
l, EGENIJ
She s miled ns •he notieed h•
friends pecking in!
The children had come to ..U:
again!
They pleaded to hear of the ...,.,
and t.he hare,
Then asked many questions abo..
hot· g1·own son.
While dusk sct.tlcd softly in plaa
of th~ sun
She stm·ted them homeward, 1
sleep-nodding pair.
The children decided the WJ
next day
When no one was wale bing 1
wander that way . . .
The garden wos empty; tllfJ
knocked nt her door.
Theil· nnswcr wns s ilence . . . nil
sta t-ted to s plnsh .. .
A shattering thunder! . .. alight·
ning flnsh!
They turned to run home, b.
heard an uproar.
Of men's mocking laugh~r u
insolent shouts,
It captured the children, no n1
to get out ...
And right in the center, with p&lo
in her face
Stood their wondc1·ful lady! Te:u1
filled the! r eye•.
They struggled to help. No or
noticed their cries.
Frightened and trembling thrr
fled from the place.
They run to their mother, to eo:z
fort th~ir tcal'l!
She held her two babes, ber btan
filled with tears, ...
Days JHtsscd in darkness, lht1
Sundny, the sun!
The child1·en, quite silent, walkfl
oul in the nil·.
Their dear Indy met them, slo
answered their prayer,
"Rejoice my dear rhildren, I1-d"). No problem that we f>l'u ~hed my hair, l
~·aved my Leeth which was sen­sible
since the water pipes were
rusty. I then made a momentous
dttision; r was going. J Kol there
promptly at three although I
atarled ut !our.
Classes let out early that day,
1ince night was near and the
rond• wc•·e broken up because of
the potato famine. Being of sen·
sible nature my friends and 1
naturally went to the nen1·est pay
phone. The mnllman had at last
received the telegram. With n
jovial heart I rejoined my friends.
She decided to go to b rcukfast
since it was near midnight and
would soon be dark. It was the
middle of summe1·, so we had to
qain put on our boots, since the
leaves were falling.
It wasn't until t he next mom·
ing that an emergency call was
made. The chimney had u leak, so
the mailman only charged us
forty dollars !or painting the
basement, which wasn't bad eon­sldel'ing
that we couldn't use the
outdoor pool anyway. The ite
skates soon were melted by the
h~at of tho ice box. It wnsn't un·
til later that I decided that this
cby wasn't particularly interest-­ing
so I gave up und got out o!
bed, which was unfortunate since
the ceiling had pink polka dots on
it. I had to go to school so T slept
until the next dny.
Suddenly the realization, the
awful truth, t he dny wus newly
awakening. The sky was blue and
birds sang their little hearts ou t.
Thank goodness, it was at last
April 2nd.
TRANT'S Inc.
Catholic Supply Store
Religious Articles for
Church and Home
98 Clinton N. 115 Franklin St.
1_.:::,:~: .~6: __
Spring Comes To Erin,
Deirdre Writes Home
S]ll'ing is here! Fot· U.C.D. stu·
dents, this means increased study
before exams, but !or many or the
thirty or forty Amel'icans, it also
menns that our yeur in frcland is
drawing to a close. Students !rom
Fairfield College (Connecticut),
The College o! St. Eliuabeth
(New Jer~y), St. John's Uni·
versity ( Minnesoto), and sev­eul
othea- institutions are here on
a "junior .. ye."lr-abroad" basis, al­though
there arc also many
Americans doing full degrees
here. Mainly, those here tor their
junior year nre English and his­tol
·y majol's, and nMrly all take
some l>hilosophy clMs-<>!ten we
are the only laymen in a sea of
clel'ical philosophers.
Natural lleauty of Ireland
What docs Ireland look like
through our Amel'icnn eyes? Phy­sically,
it is a beautiful country,
edged with mounl11ins, but level
o•· slightly I'Olling in the center,
somewhat like the shape of a
saucer. The hues in the scenery
are indescribably lovely; the deep
green is probably due to the al·
most daily rainfall. Pretty streams
l'ipple through g reen fields every.
where (there are 800 lakes and
r ivers in this small island), and
many of the roads wind us if
tuken straight from the scrolls in
the Book of Kells. A !though man)•
count1·y places probably haven't
changed much in 200 years, the
1relnnd we know is not, on the
whole, t he Ireland of Paddy's pig
and the shi llelagh; this •·ising
country is in many ways just as
modern ns nny othe1·.
HOSililality Plus
Ireland is small enough to have
a fnmi ly quality with all the con·
nected bickering and !rendliness.
Among their own, Irishmen tend
to be class-conscious and n bit
snobbish, yet they are a very hos­pitable
race, and we have found
them very friendly to us. As a
couple of us cycled through the
country, we are cordi:•lly greeted
on the road by perfect strnngers.
Part of their endearing charms
is an ability to take a real and
personal interest in people, and
part is due to their complacent
philosophy of life. An Irishman
takes life as it comes-he always
has t ime fo1· others, doesn't seem
to worry, and is never in a hurry
about anything. Although quiet
rind soft·SJlOken, t here is an e le·
ment of youth and joy about the
Irish, and they are rightly known
for their shnrp wit.
Homeward Thoughts
As our thoughts tum home­wa1'
d, we mny ask ourselves whnt
PRESCRIPTION
SPECIALISTS
The
Central
Pharmacy
9 SOUTH MAIN ST.
PITISFORD, N. Y.
Phone
LUdlow 6-3634
THE GLEANER 3
April's Jest: "What fools these mortals be!"
Well, bow do you like being
sent to the third flou•· !or abl!ed try.
ing to outs hout the bnnd nnd hns
Rtartcd to sing. Her nlbum "Con­nie
.f.'J"ancis Sings 1tfllinn Fuvo1··
ites" is an extun1llc. A ftcr u two
yea(' Rtretch in the i\l·my, Elvis
is back! During hi• visiL with
Uncle Sum, tho 25-yell!"·old rock·
and-roll idol en1·ncd, in addition
to his $145.2d n month sergeant's
s.nlary, n "mere" $l.3 tnill ion in
1·eeo•·d •·oyalties. Something new
Compliments of
DUPLICATING
PRODUCTS CO.
460 Clinton Ave. So.
Rochester 20, N. Y.
A. B. Dick Products
HAmilton 6-3740
Bastian Division
JOSTEN COMPANY
Official
Jewelers and Engravers
ROBERT E. KILLIP
I OS Laney Road
Rochester 20, N. Y.
H lllside 5-1706
Pi Gamma Mu Honor Society
Installs Eleven Nazarenes
The Nazareth College and St.
John Fisher College chapters of
the National Social Science Honor
Society, Pi Gamma Mu, inducted
new members on Monday, Febru­ary
29, in the Medaillc Hall S...
tial Room.
After the installation cere­monica
prosided over by :Miss
Mary T. Bush, Nazareth College
Chapter President, and Thomas
McDermott, St. John Fisher
Chapter President, the Rev. Rob­ert
l\1. Miller, C.S.B., a member
of the St. John Fisher faculty,
spoke on "Philosophy and the So­cial
Sciences."
The students who were inducted
hnd attained the eligibility re­quirements
of at least 20 hours in
the Social Scientes with an aver­ngc
grudc of 8 nnd a rank in the
UPJICr t hird of his or her class.
The Nn~nreth students inducted
WCI'C: Siste•· Anita, Barbara PJ'O·
!etta, Belen Cupolo, Eliza beth
Davidson, Mary Bl'idget Lyon,
EJ(.I_nflOJ" Kawka, Mary Kay Mae·
Nama•·a, Susan McGinnis, Rose.
mnry Salerno, Nancy Furino and
Catherine Foley.
The new members of the St.
John Fisher c h a p t e r include:
Franklin L. Kemp, Joseph Polizzi,
James Bond, David Glossner, Jer·
ome Brady Callan, Edwin Socf·
fing, Frank Argento and Patrick
Lavelle.
After the mee~ing a social hour
was held to foster the social re­IKtions
between the two chapters.
In conjunction with this, another
joint meeting will be held this
month.
in the "sing·along, craz.e--Nelson
Riddle, who has done orchestral
aro11ngcments ! or such greats as
Judy Garland, Nat "King" Cole,
Frank Si11<1tra und a host of
other·• has an album out called
"Sing a Song with Riddle." There
is no recorded cho1·us to sing
along with you; the album comes
complete with song sheets with
boLh wo•·da and music. The spot·
light is yours ! Just take it easy
tmd listen or dance to lhe music
itself. Jt'$ really unusual.
OPEN EVENINGS
A. Dl PASQUALE
SHOE CO.
QUALITY SHOES
For the Entire Family
Sold Direct from Factory
To Yov
lU N. UNION STREET
ROCHESTER., N. Y.
I
THE GLEANER
Junioli. ~~
C,.foif ~~ WOII.k
Again this year in accord with
their program of s tudies, the
junior speech therapists have be·
gun their teaching experiences in
the Speech Clinic at Nazareth.
The six juniors, Sally Bragg,
Linda Casey, Jane Donne, Ken
Ralaby, Nancy Koch, and Kathy
Sheehan arc very enthusiastic
about their .,first cases." The
children under their care con1e
this year fron• two o! Rochester's
grammar schools. The clinic pro·
gram is the eore of the junior's
second scmest.or work and con.
sists of four class lectures eAch
week and three individual therapy
sessions of one-half hour caeh by
each student. Sister Helen Daniel
and :1-lrs. Naomi Chamberlain of
the Speech Department conduct
the class lectures, with M1·s.
Chrunbel'lnin •upcrvising tho ther·
apy wo1·k and giving th ree half.
hour group thernpy lessons to t he
children. '!'his is the fi1·st !ormol
opportunity for the sl)cech cor·
rection majors to put into prac­tice
the theories and methods
they a•·c studying.
Seniors Beware--Be Wise
Opening day for the annual
spring series of 1·ecord ex ami na·
tions was March 29. That n•orn·
ing all Sophomores, together with
Seniors in the Art, Nursing, and
Business Departments, ettempted
to select the ~orrect answers to a
series of three Jevent.y-five min·
nute tests, one each in Natural
Science, Social Science, and lhe
Humanities. Meanwhile, the re­mainin~>:
group of Seniors met a
special test series designated as
Advanced Tests.
Senior Comps
The Senio.-s will be especially
concentrating on preparation for
the college examination• sched­uled
!or April 28, when they will
write their Senio1· Comp1·chcn·
sivcs. The title or these tests
spenks for itself!
Warren Grinnan's
Gourmet Shop
1525 Lake Avenue
Glen. 3-0570
Fancy Md Imported Foods
T ro>ppist Monks Products
Come in and Brow:e
JUSTTAKE ME TO II WHERE OLD
FRIENDS MEET
PlillFORD INN I
Pittsford, New York
BILL LISI, Prop.
-------------------~
McConnell's
* ICE CREAM
and
LUNCHES
* 60 N. Main Street
Pittsford, N.Y.
LUdlow 6-3634
Friday, April I, 1960
Trouble and Fun in Palace Kingdom
Hear Ye, Hear Ye ...
.,One.sies-twoties! Now we're
on cightsies! Ha-ba, you landed
on threcsica!" What could this
be, going on in our 0\\'n audi·
tor ium! No, you're wrong if you
thought it could be Education
minora learning to teach kinder­garten.
It's really Gail Place and
Dick Mancini playing hopscoteh.
A person can forget how in ten
or niteen years, you know. Gail
and Diek have to learn all over
again for the forthcoming SRO
production "Prmcctl Beauty.'"
We've j ust taker a look "behind
the stcnes, at one or the rehear·
8(111 .
Thing" aren't always quite that
lively though. Imagin e what
miuAt happen to you if you were
rehearsing a long, long sleep at
tho end of u long, long day. It
did htiJ>pen to Inn Shal'lit, who
J>h•ys the King. The King not
only dozed, but even snored! And
l'ighl under the eyes of his direc­tor,
Miss Stcekbcek! Gail, who
told this talc, admits that she
flnds heo·self nodding all too rea­listically
at times too! We hope
thit happens only nt rehearsals!
Like every fairy t.a1e, "P,-i,rcess
Btorctv" has its bod !airy. At
flrst she wasn'L a very good bad
fairy. ller nasty. nasty laugh just
wasn't na.sty enough. Pat Ripple
is trying thougt. Everyone has
greaL eonfldcnce that her "crazy
cackle" will be suffieiently witk
by curtain time.
Cathy Chapman hadn't worbl
out the lighting schemes at til
time of this interview, but P""'
ised that the lighting would ~
appropriately exciting nnd e
chanting. After nll what is 1
fairy talc without wand wa.U.
light and a few moonbea11>
Cathy is at the switehboard 111
ting them ready.
How in the world will that IG<
est dis:1ppenr with the wnve ol1
wand, we wondered? That's pa~
of the magic Cathy wouldn't ,.
veal. T'hat'a something you wil
have to sec for youo.,.elf.
While stiil "behind the sctnl!
we saw a gl'cat chase, with tU
good and the blld fail·y chn���i•l
each other all ovco· the klngdo11.
Before the chase was over, L
the charaetei'S involved had bftl
around the stage th rcc times ani
we were getting very confutf(
In making a hasty exit C1·om "I»
hind the scenes" we wish Ant
Duyssen, A~si$tant. Dh·cctor, gc*
luck. We hope us prop dir«U<
she won't misplace Gail's jum~
rope!
After seeing all the fun ul
activity "behind the scenes" .,
know this will be a delightful p:•
formance of a favorite Cairy w
\Ve know you'll uwand" to !­..
out (ront" at. eurtain time!!
Sociology
Spin a platter ..• have some chatter .• •
and sip that real great taste of Coke.
Sure, you can have a party without
Coca-Cola-but who wants to!
8o1tled under authority of The Coca-Colo Company by
ROCHESTER COCA-COLA BOTILING CORP.
Rochester, N. Y.